Posts Tagged: medicare reimbursement

RACs Post New Issues in June

Three of the four RACs posted new issues recently. The Region A RAC, DCS, posted 39 new DRG Validations issues, plus an approved issue to review Evaluation & Management (E&M) codes for New Patient visits, mirroring the same issues already approved for other RACs.
Despite recent reports that issues including review of Medical Necessity have already been approved by CMS in at least one region, none of the RACs have yet to post any such approved issues.
The new issues are listed below, including links to their descriptions on eduTrax®. To see those pages, you will need to login to the eduTrax main site. Registration on the site is still free.

Region A

The RAC for Region A (DCS) posted several new issues, mostly for Automated Review:

1 Blood Transfusions
2 Bronchoscopy Services
3 Duplicate Claims – Part B
4 Global Billing of Radiology or Diagnostic Tests in the Facility Setting
5 Global Surgery – Pre and Post-Operative Visits
6 Global vs. TC/PC Split Reimbursements
7 IV Hydration
8 MSDRGs 177, 189, 193, 291, 438, 441, 444, 592, 602, 682, 689, 691, 693: MS-DRG Validation for Severe Sepsis
9 MSDRGs 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221: MS-DRG Validation for Cardiac Valve Procedures
10 MSDRGs 234, 236: MS-DRG Validation for Coronary Bypass
11 MSDRGs 335, 336, 337, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355: MS-DRG Validation for Lysis of Adhesions
12 MSDRGs 463, 464, 465, 573, 574, 575, 901, 902, 903: MS-DRG Validation for Excisional Debridement
13 National Correct Coding Initiative – Part B
14 Neulasta
15 New Patient Visits
16 Newborn/Pediatric Codes
17 Once In A Lifetime
18 Parenteral Nutrition Additives with Premix Solutions
19 Technical Component of Radiology
20 Untimed Codes
21 Initial/Preparatory Knee Disarticulation Prosthesis
22 Manual Wheelchair Accessories Billed With Power Wheelchair Bases

Region C

Connolly added two DRG Validations and one issue for Automated review:

1 Lymphoma and Nonacute Leukemia with MCC: MS-DRG 840
2 Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedure with Drug-Eluting Stent without MCC: MS-DRG 247
3 Zoledronic acid, (Zometa) – Dose vs. Units Billed

Region D

HDI added a single issue for Automated review, concerning Discharge Status:

1 Incorrect Patient Status – Acute

Every wonder about what difference a Discharge Status code makes for your reimbursement? Take a look at the Transfer DRG Assistant® at the eduTrax site. The complete tool includes all DRGs, all the Discharge Codes with explanations, and can show you an estimated difference in reimbursement based upon length of stay, the DRG assigned, and the appropriate status code, which is determined by where a patient may (or may not) wind up going after discharge from your facility.

Making Your Own RAC Issues Lists?

Good luck, we know how hard it is to do. To find a complete, sortable listing of all the RACs’ posted issues, visit this page on eduTrax. (Registration required.)

We recommend viewing the list, sorted by Approved Date.

To see the complete original listings (on the RAC websites), visit this page.

When Will Medical Necessity Reviews Begin?

No one knows but the RACs, and so far, they ain’t sayin’.

BUT — If you would like to be notified immediately whenever they do get posted, simply to the click here to subscribe for free to the eduTrax RAC New Issues Alert Service®.

We post new issues, as in this article, and will send out an email notice immediately when medical necessity issues begin posting on the RAC websites.

More Issues and Medical Necessity Expected Any Day

CMS May Have Already Approved Medical Necessity Reviews

During the May 5, 2010 RAC 101 Conference Call, Scott Wakefield, a CMS RAC Project Manager for Region B stated that providers may begin to receive RAC medical necessity reviews “within the next month or so.” According to one observer, he seemed somewhat surprised that no such reviews have been posted by the RACs, as yet, and intimated that such issues had already been approved.

Meanwhile, in the past two weeks, the RAC have all posted new issues, but none with medical necessity reviews approved.

The new issues are listed below, including links to their descriptions in the eduTrax® RAC New Issues pages. To see those pages, you will need to login to the eduTrax main site. Registration on the site is still free.

Region A

While the RAC for Region A (DCS) only posted one new issue, it is not exactly inconsequential:

MS-DRG Validation for HIV — Reviewers will validate claims where diagnosis code 042 Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Disease was billed as secondary.

This is currently the only DRG Validation issue that cannot be specifically tied to a single MSDRG. This issue involves any DRG where HIV appears as a secondary diagnosis.

Region B

CGI Federal added two new issues: one Automated Review and one that includes 3 DRG Validations:

Knee Orthoses — concerns certain additions not being separately payable.

MSDRG 239, 240, 241: DRG Validation for Amputation for Circulatory System Disorders Except Upper Limb and Toe.

This site remains the most difficult to track – it is designed to require human interaction across eight pages of issues.

Region C

Connolly Healthcare posted 19 new issues, including 21 new DRG Validations:

Darbepoetin alfa (non-ESRD) – Dose vs. Units Billed
Bevacizumab – Dose vs. Units Billed
Carboplatin – Dose vs. Units Billed
Docetaxel – Dose vs. Units
Irinotecan – Dose vs. Units Billed
Darbepoetin alfa (ESRD) – Dose vs. Units Billed
MS-DRG 040: Peripheral/Cranial Nerve and Other Nervous System Procedures with MCC
MS-DRG 841: Lymphoma and Nonacute Leukemia with CC
MS-DRG 258: Cardiac Pacemaker Device Replacement with MCC
MS-DRG 653: Major Bladder Procedure with MCC
MS-DRG 659: Kidney and Ureter Procedures for Non-Neoplasm with MCC
MS-DRG 326: Stomach, Esophageal and Duodenal Procedures with MCC
MS-DRG 009: Bone Marrow Transplant: MS-DRG 009
MS-DRG 328: Stomach, Esophageal and Duodenal Procedures without CC/MCC
MS-DRG 623: Skin Grafts and Wound Debridement for Endocrine, Nutritional & Metabolic Disorders w/CC
MS-DRG 802: Other O.R. Procedures of the Blood and Blood-Forming Organs with MCC
MS-DRGs 034, 035, 036, 215, 223, 224, 225, 231, 232, 286: Cardiac Procedures
MS-DRG 541: Osteomyelitis without CC/MCC
DME vs. Inpatient

Region D

Even HDI added a new issue for Automated Review:

Part B Duplicates – Automated Review

Making Your Own Lists?

Good luck, we know how hard it is to do.  To find a complete, sortable listing of all their posted issues, visit this page on eduTrax. (Registration required.) We recommend viewing the list, sorted by Approved Date.

To see the complete original listings (on the RAC websites), visit this page.

When Will Medical Necessity Reviews Begin?

No one knows but the RACs, and so far, they ain’t sayin’.

BUT — If you would like to be notified immediately whenever they do get posted, simply to the click here to subscribe for free to the eduTrax RAC New Issues Alert Service®.

We post new issues, as in this article, and will send out an email notice immediately when medical necessity issues begin posting on the RAC websites.

RACs and All That Jazz!

For those of you who are Jazz/ Blues and in general just music lovers, the last weekend in April and first weekend in May is the Jazz and Heritage Music Festival in New Orleans. This year the festival is in its 41st year, and I have been fortunate to have attended many over the past 20 years. So what does this have to do (if anything) with the CMS RAC program, which certainly does not ‘set providers days or nights’ to music?!

“Musical” Change and Interpretation

When CMS started the pilot RAC program several years ago, few providers outside of the demonstration states paid any attention, if they had even heard of the initiative. A few more providers and organizations (very few) began to pay some attention when the first ‘big notes’ of CMS financial opportunity and recovery began to be sounded, and by the time the program was ‘made permanent’ the ability to influence or re-write the song for providers was past.

Jazz is a wonderful and uniquely American music form, many contributing nationalities, ethnicities, generations have allowed it to morph, grow and expand to the amazing ‘melting pot’ of sounds so many of us enjoy. However the path to growth and inclusion into this form of music has not been easy for individual musicians, bands, clubs, or communities. Places like Memphis, Nashville, Harlem, New Orleans and how many others have seen those ‘pushing the bounds’ of musical genius or musical mediocrity harassed, ignored, shunned or taken advantaged of? Change and interpretation of the ‘standard’ way of approaching or enjoying musical expression has not been without resistance and controversy or without outrage in some instances.

RAC  ‘Music’

Since the 60’s Medicare has been the songwriter if you will of overall payment for certain healthcare services to a defined beneficiary population here in the US. The song has been changed, re-written, melody (?!) redundant or sycophant, with so many new song writers. The goal all along has attempted to meet the growing needs of the population and to ‘sing’ in such a way that the participant providers who share the payment song will continue in the band. So now another new refrain has been added, the RAC music. Depending upon the ‘listener’ the music may be; dissonant, off key, flat, loud, over whelming, and downright awful; however other listeners may find the notes struck timely, relevant, ‘new age’ and important.

Regardless of your perspective, exposure to the various music forms allows listeners to appreciate the facets of the current world; I was not a fan of RAP music when it first appeared on the music scene and still don’t find it a favorite of mine, however it is expressive and relevant for many. Providers must all listen to the RAC music being played today, understand the flow of the melody, the growth of new stanza’s and employ those who can ‘enjoy’ the new music form.

Musical Conclusion

Most often the articles I have written here have been meant to convey some new information or perhaps new way of seeing that which is widely known regarding the RAC program. It is a serious endeavor for CMS and should be taken very seriously by all providers, but the choice to ‘change the channel’ or not listen to this form of payer music is not optional. You can dislike the music, but you best get the point of the lyrics.

In conclusion, I love Jazz and the Jazz Festival here in New Orleans; I love the city, the people, the food, the sounds….. all of it……interesting note however , one of the closing acts this year is not known for their Jazz music, rather a form I do not know or enjoy over much….. it seems fitting to me that they are included and the crowds will be huge for them………Pearl Jam………..hmmm not consistent with the original theme 41 years ago I imagine…….none the less timely and worth listening to for many.

Pat Dear, eduTrax CEO

New Orleans

May 1, 2010

RAC 101 – The Movie

New Video Posted by CMS

CMS posted a recording of a RAC 101 seminar conducted by Connie Leonard and Commander Marie Casey, earlier in April. If you missed the RAC 101 conference call on April 28, this is probably the same script.

The video includes a short Q&A period, with what we would characterize as typical FAQs.

However, there were two questions asked during this video that produced two previously unheard answers:

  • While RACs can use extrapolation, there are currently no issues approved that can use extrapolation; and
  • When one RAC is approved for a new issue, the other three RACs do not automatically receive approval for that same issue — the other RACs must submit their own case to be approved for their region.

Find the video HERE.

Connolly Adds 20 More in April

More High Dollar, High Volume DRGs

Connolly Healthcare, the RAC for Region C, posted 20 new DRG Validation Issues to their list of CMS-Approved audit issues, on Friday, April16. The list includes eight (8) MS-DRGs with very high Relative Weights (which equates to high dollar reimbursements and thereby potentially high RAC fees) and six (6) with claim volumes in the top 25% of all DRGs (providing a rather large number of claims to potentially audit).

Four (4) of the newly approved issues are for MSDRGs with Relative Weights of better than 10.0.  Such claims have high dollar reimbursements, averaging over $45,000 per claim, nationwide.

Once again, these approval/postings seems to continue a pattern previously noted. (See our posts from February 9 and March 17.)

Virgina and West Virginia Now Included

The states of Virginia and West Virginia have been absent from the list of states affected or approved for any issues, until some recent changes to the lists, earlier in April. Still, not all the issues have been approved for these two states.

The New Issues

Below are the new posted and approved audit issues for RAC Region C, including Relative Weights and FY09 Discharge Ranks:  (a low rank number relates to a large number of discharges for that DRG, nationwide)

  • MS-DRG 003: ECMO or Tracheotomy with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours or Principal Diagnosis Except Face, Mouth and Neck with Major O.R. (RW 18.27; Rank 122)
  • MS-DRG 001: Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist System with MCC (RW 24.85; Rank 720)
  • MS-DRG 005: Liver Transplant with MCC or Intestinal Transplant (RW 10.14; Rank 713)
  • MS-DRG 332: Rectal Resection with MCC (RW 4.78; Rank 297)
  • MS-DRG 562: Kidney Transplant (RW 1.38; Rank 79)
  • MS-DRG 011: Tracheotomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses with MCC (RW 4.73; Rank 476)
  • MS-DRG 012: Tracheotomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses with CC (RW 3.03; Rank 584)
  • MS-DRG 020: Intracranial Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage with MCC (RW 8.44; Rank 696)
  • MS-DRG 021: Intracranial Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage with CC (RW 6.21; Rank 696)
  • MS-DRG 927: Extensive Burns or Full Thickness Burns with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours with Skin Graft (RW 13.74; Rank 629)
  • MS-DRG 929: Full Thickness Burn with Skin Graft or Inhalation Injury without CC/MCC (RW 2.01; Rank 728)
  • MS-DRG 023: Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute Complex Central Nervous System Principal Diagnosis with MCC or Chemo Implant (RW 4.94; Rank 469)
  • MS-DRG 024: Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute Complex Central Nervous System Principal Diagnosis without MCC (RW 3.26; Rank 212)
  • MS-DRG 007: Lung Transplant (RW 9.45; Rank 689)
  • MS-DRG 076: Viral Meningitis without CC/MCC (RW 0.83; Rank 510)
  • MS-DRG 461: Bilateral or Multiple Major Joint Procedures of Lower Extremity with MCC (RW 4.56; Rank 187)
  • MS-DRGs 799, 800, 801: Splenectomy w MCC, w CC, w/o CC/MCC (RW 5.11, 2.53, 1.59; Ranks 666, 709, 620)
  • MS-DRG 177: Respiratory Infections & Inflammations with MCC (RW 2.05; Rank 35)
  • MS-DRG 178: Respiratory Infections & Inflammations with CC (RW 1.49; Rank 132)
  • MS-DRG 179: Respiratory Infections & Inflammations without CC/MCC (RW 1.01; Rank 119)

To see the complete original listings (on the RAC websites), visit this page.

Or, to find a more useful listing of all their posted issues, visit  this page on eduTrax.  (Registration required.)

Still No Medical Necessity Reviews

All of the above approved issues still include this caveat:

(At this time, Medical Necessity excluded from review).

As faithful readers know, however, Medical Necessity Reviews could be approved by CMS at any time now, since the CMS RAC Review Phase-In Strategy allows for such audits in calendar 2010.

We will shortly post further analysis, in an overview of the DRG Validations posted to date by all four RACs.

Part A Denial is NOT Automatic Denial for Part B Services, Says Medicare Appeals Council

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recently asked the Medicare Appeals Council (Council) to review and overturn an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) “partly favorable” decision for O’Connor Hospital, of San Jose, California. The case originated in 2007 during the Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) Demonstration Project. In its request to have Council review the appeal, CMS attempted to argue that the Part B services were not separately billable under Part A, and therefore the ALJ had erred as a matter of law when it ordered CMS to pay the provider the difference between the covered and non-covered services.

On February 1, 2010, the Council posted their decision: they did not agree and stated that the position of CMS was essentially inconsistent with policies found in its own manuals.

On December 7, 2007, the RAC charged with auditing California providers denied Medicare coverage for a claim of inpatient hospitalization services, as furnished to a beneficiary on November 1, and 2, 2004, at O’Connor Hospital. The RAC found the services provided were not “reasonable and necessary” per the Social Security Act, and therefore the hospital had received an overpayment. Like virtually every other claim filed by a RAC during the demonstration, said overpayment finding was upheld at both of the first two levels of the appeals process.

The first level of appeal in the RAC program, when requested by the provider, is a Redetermination. This is an additional examination of the claim by the RAC, supposedly by personnel who are different from the personnel who made the initial determination. One might consider this as simply a chance to ask the RAC to be sure to check their paperwork. We are not aware of any denials being overturned at this level of appeal during the Demonstration project.

The second level of appeal, again when requested, is a Reconsideration. These are always conducted by a Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC), thereby allowing an independent review of medical necessity issues by a panel of physicians or other health care professionals. (This is a change from previous programs, but did not originate with the RAC. These reviews were instituted in Section 521 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (BIPA), and replaced the Hearing Officer Hearing process for Medicare Part B claims, while creating a “new” second level of appeal for Medicare Part A claims.)

The provider took the claims to the next level of appeal, the Administrative Law Judge, or ALJ. There were four claims in question for four different beneficiaries at O’Connor. On September 16, 2009, the ALJ overturned the RAC denial for three of the four claims, thereby reversing the denial and granting Medicare coverage for the inpatient services, as filed. The fourth claim, however, was a more sticky situation.

While the ALJ agreed with the RAC and denied the coverage for the inpatient services provided as billed on the fourth claim, the ALJ nevertheless found that “the observation and underlying care are warranted.” In other words, yes, the inpatient admission was not warranted, but the observation and other outpatient services were warranted and should therefore be paid by CMS, even though the services were never billed as such. Or, put another way: “down-code” the claim to Part B services and pay those.

The net effect was to reduce the recoupment to simply the difference between the Part A and Part B services provided for the fourth claim only, compared to complete recoupment of all four inpatient claims, as the RAC originally decided.

Even without knowing the exact figures involved, this all suggests that CMS may have lost money on the entire process — they had to return all monies recouped, less the difference noted, but the RAC got to keep their entire commission/fee/bounty, per their contract with CMS.

Of course, while the provider got back almost all their reimbursements for the four claims, they still had to pay legal fees out of their own pocket. Considering the time involved, these were likely not insignificant.

Without reviewing all the documents here, we do wish to note a few things we think providers should consider about these decisions, regarding potential strategies for RAC appeals:

First: Bring these decisions to the attention of your legal counsel. Providers should bring both these  decisions to the attention of their legal counsel, and their RAC Team.

Second:  In Part A Medical Necessity Denials, fight for reimbursements for Part B services, if provided. Medical necessity reviews have not yet been approved for RACs, but they are likely to begin at any time. Although the O’Connor case was a result of a RAC Demonstration project denial, the Medicare Appeals Council decision is at least the second time that the Council has reminded CMS that they in fact have current policies in place that not only say that such claims should be paid as described in these cases (unbilled Part B services are sometimes payable when Part A is denied), but that CMS even instructs contractors to do exactly that. These cases offer good reason to believe the Council will render decisions in the future that are consistent with these two.

Third: In such cases, refile for Part B services as provided. The date for “refiling” a claim under such circumstances could be difficult to determine, but may depend upon what the Medicare Appeals Council considers as “new evidence” — which, at least in the case of the UMDNJ appeal, could be inferred from the fact that the contractor reached a denial decision and informed the provider of same, thereby supplying the provider with “new evidence.” Even without such a date for “reopening” the file, in the case of the O’Connor appeal, the Council found that the time limit is simply the end of the entire process, its “finality.”

Fourth: Familiarize yourself with these decisions. The Council cites several documents that are important to the decisions.

The documents cited can all be found HERE on www.myedutrax.com in our Documents Section.

CMS Expands RAC Records Requests Limits

Limits Now Apply to All Institutional Claim Types, Not Just DRG Validations

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) modified its FY2010 Additional Documentation Request (ADR) Limits, expanding the scope of the rule to include all institutional providers, on January 28, 2010. Previously, the rule applied to ADRs for DRG Validation issues only, as posted by CMS on December 1, 2009, and would have only applied to Medicare Part A providers. CMS also indicated that more changes are yet to come, with rules applying to physicians and other types of providers, including DME suppliers.

The December posting indicated that there would be two “caps” made on RAC ADRs, during FY2010. Through March 2010, the cap would remain at 200 ADRs per 45 days for all providers/suppliers. However, from April through September 2010, providers/suppliers who bill in excess of 100,000 claims to Medicare, across all claims processing contractors, would have a cap of 300 ADRs per per 45 days.

These limits would apply per “campus” instead of per NPI (National Provider Identifier). The definition of a campus is CMS’s new method of calculating limits, and is based on providers’ Tax ID Numbers plus the first three numbers of the ZIP code where those provider entities are physically located.

This most recent posting does not change any of the previous limits or definitions, but does expand the rule to apply to all claim types, not just DRG Validations.

Read the new document  HERE , along with a copy of the text from the December document.

RAC Report: 83% of Errors Correctable

During the RAC Demonstration Project (the pilot program operated in six states for what is now being rolled out to all 50 states), RAC auditors uncovered more than $900 Million in overpayments. Of those denied and recouped claims, 42% were simply incorrectly coded, 32% were deemed “medically unnecessary services” – which is often code for “documentation does not support the setting,” usually inpatient – and 9% were simply found to have insufficient or no documentation to support the claim. This last 9% could actually be very similar to the “medically unnecessary services” denials. Regardless, in all three of those denial types, the errors could have been avoided.

Now, that is really good news, because it means your facility or practice could avoid losing those reimbursements, by simply “playing by the rules” set down by CMS. (We know, sounds easy, and yes, it’s more complicated than that, but it IS possible…)

And The Alternative is UGLY

Besides, even better news is that the way to avoid those errors is not difficult nor is it expensive – certainly NOT COMPARED to the alternative, which is having a RAC or one of the other seven government entities now looking over your Medicare claims find the errors.  Why is that better news?

Sometimes You Can Refile

Look at it this way: if YOU find the errors, you can refile those claims with the appropriate codes (making sure to include appropriate changes into the medical record, i.e., more detailed and approriate documentation), and you can at least be paid whatever you are entitled to, according to the appropriate (contractual and regulatory) payment schedules.

Actually, you might only be able to refile part of the claim, depending on the error. For example, if you need to change the status of the patient from inpatient to observation or outpatient, and you’ve found this error before the patient is discharged from the hospital, then you can resubmit the services for outpatient reimbursement. However, if you find this error after discharge, and you are within certain time limits after the date of service, you can refile the claim, but only for the ancillary services, not the services that you previously billed as inpatient. So, it behooves you to catch these errors early.

But if a RAC finds the errors, you may lose the entire reimbursement in the case of a Medical Necessity denial. RACs will seek and, 86% of the time, succeed in recouping all or most of the reimbursement. In such cases, you might be able to refile for some of the ancillary services. There is a short list of what you refile for, and then only if you are refiling within 27 months of the claim’s date of service. If that date is as far back as 27 to 36 months ago, and not prior to 10/1/07, which is the limit of what a RAC can reach, you are out of luck. You get zip. ( see this previous post )

Oh, and all the other providers who filed claims associated with that admission will ALSO be denied, and they have no right to appeal the denial. Only the facility that filed the inpatient claim can appeal. If you are a SNF, or LTC, or the attending physician, you not only lose your reimbursements, as the facility did, but you cannot appeal the denial.

Don’t Wait for May or August or even Friday

So, see, the best idea is DON’T WAIT FOR THE RACS. Do self-audits NOW and find your problems. You can self-disclose (it’s is a tricky thing… be sure to have your lawyers involved) and, within the billing guidelines, refile appropriately.

Internal vs. External Audits

Should you do internal or external audits? Our answer is: a resounding YES. You need to do BOTH. Why? That’s in another post, coming soon…

Reduced Payments Proposed

But No Details Provided Yet.

President Obama released his budget proposal, including broad reforms to the payment systems in health care, as reported by the New York Times, last week (Pear, New York Times, 2/27). The FY2010 proposal includes $2 trillion in mandatory spending, including Medicare and Medicaid (Calmes, New York Times, 2/27).  Mandatory spending for Medicare would total $453 billion, and mandatory spending for Medicaid would total $290 billion (Washington Post, 2/27).

However, the proposal also would decrease spending for Medicare and Medicaid to help finance a reserve fund, included in the plan and intended to help finance and expand health insurance to all residents(Taylor, AP/Kansas City Star, 2/26). Half of the reserve fund would be financed with increased revenue from tax changes and half with reduced spending in health care programs (Levey, Los Angeles Times, 2/27). The proposed reductions in payments to providers are “sure to incite battles with doctors, hospitals, health insurance companies and drug manufacturers,” according to the AP/Detroit Free Press (Crutsinger, AP/Detroit Free Press, 2/26).

The Christian Science Monitor comments that the reserve fund “would represent a huge change in national direction, as it implies that the U.S. will move towards some sort of universal health care system” (Grier, Christian Science Monitor, 2/27).   There will likely be a “battle” over “how to finance Mr. Obama’s national health insurance plan,” which “will significantly expand the cost of government,” the Washington Times reports (Lambro, Washington Times, 2/27).

President Obama plans to release a detailed proposal in April, but the plan likely will not include additional details on health care reform, as he hopes to draft legislation with lawmakers, The Hill reports (Young, The Hill, 2/26).  Obama said, “With this budget, we are making a historic commitment to comprehensive health care reform.  It’s a step that will not only make families healthier and companies more competitive, but over the long term, it will also help us bring down our deficit” (Sanchez, CongressDaily, 2/26).

An opinion piece in the New York Times by David Leonhardt had this to say:  Obama’s plan to “lift the incomes of the middle class and poor through … an overhaul of health care” is “likely to meet stiff opposition from some doctors and insurers.”  He adds that Obama’s budget would begin “paying for investments that would eventually allow Medicare officials to refuse to pay for medical treatment” that is proven to be relatively ineffective, which would “vastly reduce the government’s long-term budget deficit” and likely would “bring down private health costs, since insurers typically follow Medicare’s lead” (Leonhardt, New York Times, 2/27).

NPR‘s All Things Considered on 2/26 provides a 4 minute audio overview here. (Open that link and then click on the Listen Now button just under the title.) Find their complete article on the budget proposal here.

What does it all mean?

No details are yet provided, and President Obama seems to be leaving all the nitty-gritty details to Congress, which appears eager to tackle the issues, albeit with purely partisan lines still being drawn. Since the partisan divide still exists, lobbyists with deep pockets still hold court in Washington, and health care spending occupies one seventh of our economy, President Obama and Congress have their work cut out for them, especially since the President is urging Congress to do all this in one year.

We’ll keep watching and reporting details, which will have to be worked out by Congress. Be sure to signup for the email updates for this blog.

How Much Do RACs Take?

Unfortunately, this is not a simple question… We thought this needed some clarification, at this time.

We have mentioned before that the RACs take back 100% of a claim when they issue a demand letter. (See Can I Resumbit? and Principal Diagnosis for examples).  We stand by those posts, but perhaps they need some explaining. You should consider them accurate, however, given past experience. During the pilot program, the RACs demanded 100% and very rarely allowed any resubmit of a claim. In the future, however, there may be some different experiences, depending upon the prevailing winds, the attitudes of any specific RAC program contractor, and perhaps the price of tea in China, who knows.

At eduTrax we are dubious that the RACs will demand less than 100% of a contested claim, since they are authorized to do so (currently), and they are, after all, PAID based upon the dollar amounts that they recoup.  See how much they make HERE.

We do allow that there is the possibility that a RAC will only demand the difference between their interpretation of the correct payment versus what was actually paid. But we’d like to point out that there is no reason to believe that the RACs actually participate in the program out of any altruistic concerns for the state of healthcare in the USA.

The RAC contractors participate for the oldest reason there is — they are well paid to do so, and the more they recoup, the more they profit. See our post on the recent delay in the program, initiated only due to legal wrangling by two firms who lost out on their bids to become RAC contractors. See the news article about it on our Latest News page, at www.myedutrax.com.

The only good thing we can say is that, absent any fraudulent activities or intent, the MOST they will demand is 100% of the specified reimbursements.

We realize that is not very reassuring. Many of our clients have decided to reserve 100% of reimbursement for any cases they can internally identify as problematic, through our audits and use of our courses and tools. We believe this to be a wise practice. We can all hope that they can only lose the difference between the amount that should have been submitted, versus the amount that was filed and paid. But there is, at this time, no evidence to support that hope.

For the sake of argument and to explain further, the possibility exists that RACs will only demand the difference between the correct versus the incorrect reimbursement. For example, as we explained in Too Late to Query, using an incorrectly coded case for a secondary diagnosis, if a RAC demands the entire amount of the claim, then the facility is out about $9000. If however, the RAC only demands the difference between the correct & incorrect coding, the facility is only (only?) out about $3000. The problem we have with this idea/hope involves the motivation of the RAC: they are in this for profit, nothing else. Let’s call these “fees” commissions, which is more accurate…

The difference between the two potential demand letters is $9000 versus $3000, a difference of $6000. The commission for the Region A RAC is 12.5%: the choice then is $1125 versus $375. Why would the RAC choose the smaller commission?

Of course, the RAC must return any commissions paid to them for demands that are successfully appealed. We have seen that the likelihood of appeals is low (less than 15% were appealed in the demonstration project) and the likelihood of being overturned on appeal is even lower (less than 5% were overturned). (Find the CMS Report here.)

And finally, there’s this — the AHA has estiimated that it costs a provider an average of $2000 to file an appeal for a claim in the RAC process.

So, armed with that knowledge, how many claims will YOU file appeals for?

Now you know why we’ve said the RACs will take 100% of the claim, not just the difference between the right and wrong reimbursements. There’s no incentive for them to NOT take 100%.

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